The camp will operate Mondays through Fridays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with the drop-off time beginning at 8:30 a.m. and pickup time lasting through 5:30 p.m. The camp will run June 26-July 28 on the campus of Concordia University Irvine, located just south of University Drive and the I-405.

Girls attending Project Scientist will receive instruction from credentialed teachers from the local area, get daily talks and interaction with female STEM professionals from various fields, participate in interactive experiments and engage in activities that involve “teamwork, resiliency, self/group motivation, and trail and error,” according to a news release.

Also every Wednesday, students will get on a bus and go on a STEM expedition field trip. The weekly themes will include myth busters, sports medicine, coding and makerspace, designing your world, deep-sea divers and space explorers.

“Kids in general are not getting enough STEM during the day, because teachers are just overloaded,” said Sandy Marshall, founder and CEO of Project Scientist, a nonprofit based in Laguna Beach, CA and Charlotte, NC. “So there’s a need for all kids to have supplemental STEM.”

Marshall continued, “There’s a lot of research that indicates that boys have a growth mindset and girls have a fixed mindset as early as 6 years old. Girls think, ‘I’m just not good at math,’ whereas boys think, ‘I just need to practice.’ It’s really important to combat the stereotyping. We want to catch them at a young age and give them confidence and vision for themselves.”

The camp costs $725 per week, Marshall said. Forty percent of girls attending come from free and reduced-lunch household and get some type of scholarship or aid, she said. The average student attends between two and three weeks.